Everything about James Hector totally explained
Sir James Hector (
March 16,
1834–
November 6,
1907) was a
Scottish geologist,
naturalist, and
surgeon who accompanied the
Palliser Expedition as a surgeon and geologist. He went on to have a lengthy career as a government employed man of science in
New Zealand, and during this period he dominated the Colony's scientific institutions in a way that no single man has since.
He attended the
Edinburgh Academy. At 14, he began articling as an
actuary at his father's office. He joined
University of Edinburgh as a medical student and received his
medical degree in
1856. Shortly after receiving his medical degree, upon the recommendation of Sir
Roderick Murchison – director-general of the Geological Survey of the United Kingdom – Hector was appointed geologist on the Palliser Expedition under the command of
John Palliser. The goal of the Palliser expedition to British North America (now Canada) was to explore new train routes for the
Canadian Pacific Railway and to explore new species of plants.
In
1858, when Palliser's expedition was exploring a
mountain pass near the
continental divide of the
Canadian Rockies, one of Hector's
packhorse fell into the river. As it was pulled from the water, his horse bolted, and while chasing after it he was kicked in the chest and knocked unconscious. Hector wrote about the expedition in his diary:
"In attempting to recatch my own horse, which had strayed off while we were engaged with the one in the water, he kicked me in the chest". His companions, thinking him dead, dug a grave for him and prepared to put him in. His premature burial was cancelled when he regained consciousness. The pass and nearby river have been known since as the
Kicking Horse Pass and
Kicking Horse River respectively.
Following his return to Britain after the Palliser expedition, Hector again secured a paid scientific position with Roderick Murchison’s help. In
1862 he arrived in Dunedin in New Zealand to conduct a three year geological survey of
Otago. Hector travelled throughout the south of New Zealand's
South Island to assess its potential for settlement and to record the location of useful minerals. He also assembled a staff of half a dozen men to assist with such tasks as fossil collecting, chemical analysis, and botanical and zoological taxonomy.
In
1865 Hector was appointed to found the Geological Survey of New Zealand, and he moved to Wellington to supervise the construction of the
Colonial Museum, which was to be the Survey’s headquarters. As the chief Government-employed scientist, Hector gave politicians advice on questions as diverse as exporting wool to Japan and improving fibre production from New Zealand flax. His political influence was underlined by his marriage in
1868 to Maria Georgiana Monro, daughter of the speaker of the House of Representatives.
Hector managed the Colony’s premier scientific society – the New Zealand Institute – for thirty-five years, and from
1885 was Chancellor of the University of New Zealand. He controlled virtually every aspect of state-funded science. He had close and, at times, tense relationships with other men of science, in particular
Julius von Haast. At the end of his career he was criticized for failing to acquire
Maori artifacts for the Colonial Museum and for not adequately defending his departments from the Liberal Government’s funding cuts. In
1902, for example, the ethnographer
Elsdon Best wrote to Augustus Hamilton, the future director of the Colonial Museum, to state that Hector should be forced from office and that they should ‘put a live man in in his place’.
Hector retired in
1903, after four decades at the centre of organized science in New Zealand. In 1903 during a visit to Canada, he said of his mishap in Kicking Horse Pass,
"When I regained consciousness, my grave was dug and they were preparing to put me in it. So that's how Kicking Horse got its name and how I came to have a grave in this part of the world." He died in Lower Hutt, New Zealand, in
1907.
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